Pros
Some smart, hardworking individual contributors who are doing their best despite the environment. That’s about it.
Cons
This company is a case study in how bad leadership can destroy morale. Leadership is deeply insecure and compensates with relentless micromanagement. There is little trust, constant oversight, and an obsession with optics over outcomes. Strategy changes frequently, often without explanation, and teams are expected to absorb the chaos without question. Work-life balance is a myth. “Flexible PTO” exists only on paper. The workload is unreasonable, expectations are unclear, and being constantly available is implicitly required. Taking time off feels risky and discouraged, and burnout is not an exception - it’s the norm. Support during EST hours is almost nonexistent. Teams are left stranded without leadership presence or decision-making authority when it matters most. Escalations are slow, communication is fragmented, and accountability conveniently disappears when problems surface. The culture is openly toxic. Blame is the default response to failure. Instead of solving problems, people focus on finger-pointing and self-preservation. This creates a hostile environment where collaboration is performative and trust is virtually nonexistent. The product organization is especially unhealthy. It is driven by pressure, fear, and constant second-guessing. Priorities shift without warning, feedback is one-directional, and psychological safety does not exist. Product managers are expected to absorb unrealistic demands from all sides while being given little authority, support, or respect. Leadership frequently talks about values, transparency, and empowerment, but daily behavior contradicts all of it. The disconnect between what is said and what is done is staggering. Overall, this is not a people-first company. It is a burnout factory with a polished employer brand that does not reflect reality.